Yes, cats are lazy eaters, and I still like using food puzzles

Saw this reposted article today:

https://www.companionanimalpsychology.com/2022/01/scientists-surprised-to-learn-that-cats.html?fbclid=IwAR3x5WuNL_pZg21Cc7n0ysxVrImI9VktzEx1WcEKURor_lg4asO_T05qpik&m=1

I love Dr. Mikel Delgado, self-proclaimed cat geek. I was fortunate enough to have attendinded a talk she did about shelter cays at the 2019 Cat Camp NYC, as well as some of the webinars she’s presented.

In my work as a cat sitter, I frequently suggest to clients to add food puzzles, slow feeders, and other forms of food-related enrichment. I think they help to decrease boredom and stress when their people are away, and they can help slow down cats that eat too quickly and then regurgitate food immediately after – or even in the middle of – eating. This study doesn’t contradict that.

I like these tools, but they’re also not appropriate for all cats, like cats that aren’t food-motivated, that don’t have much appetite, and if the puzzles are too hard for them. Cats each have their own talents and skill levels and set-ups that work best for them.

I was humbled this summer when I put out what I consider to be a relatively easy food puzzle for my own cat, Olaf, (this one, which can work well for most cats, rabbits, and Guinea pigs, too). It has big pieces, and you just have to lift them up to get to the food. You could tip it over or knock it around to dislodge the pieces, too. No manipulating things, not much thinking needed to get to the food, easy to cclean. I’d never had a per have a problem with it… until I gave it to Olaf. I was mortified to come home after a long work day to a hungry cat and a full, untouched food puzzle. Ahhhhhhhh. At least he’s pretty and fluffy. My poor magnificent beast did not have the brain cell that day. Ok, he’s not orange, but he still needs a turn with it sometimes! In my defense, ten years ago, a young Olaf would have gotten into it and inhaled the food within seconds. But Olaf is now about 16, a super senior, and he doesn’t have that young cat’s drive and urgency for food.

Before immediately spending money on a new food puzzle or slow feeder, I often suggest trying inexpensive diy options first to test out the waters. A muffin tin, either upside-down or right side up, can work well as a slow feeder. Some people put a golf ball in their cat’s dry food dish to slow them down. Instead of one food dish, there could be a few smaller portions of food put in different areas, so the cat has to walk from one dish to the next, to encourage eating slower and to get them moving.

There’s also lick mats, and I like them a lot for most cats. Licking is therapeutic for cats, so licking their wet food or wet treats off of a lick mat can be calming rather than frustrating, and reduce stress from being at home alone.

Nothing but the best locally-sourced organic produce for my Guinea pig and rabbit clients!

Three years ago, after noting interest in organic produce from my clients, I subscribed to an organic veggie basket every two weeks for the summer/fall season at La Ferme Cooperative aux Champs qui Chantent . Registration for the 2024 season is currently open! I definitely recommend checking it out and reserving soon, as shares do sell out.

When I board small pets like Guinea pigs and chinchillas, a twice daily fresh vegetable service is included in the boarding fees. I also provide fresh vegetables after a certain period to pets that visits in their own homes, like rabbits.

I have been continually impressed with the abundance and quality of each veggie basket, and with the efficiency and hard work of the staff.

My Guinea pig boarders have definitely enjoyed the organic, seasonal, locally-grown selections, and rabbit and hamster clients, foster mice, and personal hamster have all given it an enthusiastic yes!

How it works is that the veggie baskets are reserved and paid for in advance. The quantity comes in either a single or double option, and the frequency is either weekly or biweekly. If I could, I would absolutely reserve a weekly double basket, because the produce is amazing, but I have once again reserved a familial basket, which alternates single and double portions.

There is an option to donate to or buy solidarity baskets, to help provide affordable veggie baskets for those who need them.

And this year, Cats and Hamsters is pleased to support this staff-owned collective with their new Equitable basket, which will help to provide the farmers with an equitable salary.

I have also enjoyed the organic farm-fresh eggs and occassional extra offerings, like local honey!

Cruises – it is possible to depart directly out of Montreal’s Old Port!

I have been FASCINATED  by the current TikTok obsession with the Royal Carribean 9-month world cruise. And it also seems interesting that booking these all-inclusive type of trips months and years in advance might be an effective way at cruising through vacationing during times of inflation, since meals and most expenses are usually included in the package.

It is also a great way of planning travel while coordinating pet care or plant watering coverage, because it’s easier to reserve services well in advance, rather than, say, the week before departure during periods of high demand.

Yes, my friends. It is advisable to budget for and to reserve pet care at the same time as if not prior to making travel arrangements.

Not the week before.

Not in the middle of crazy busy holiday travel periods.

Not the day before you leave because your friend who always said they’d watch the cats for you suddenly says they’re traveling at the same time and they can’t do it anymore.

BOOK PET CARE AT THE SAME TIME AS OR PRIOR TO BOOKING TRAVEL ARRANGEMENTS. That is, in order to guarantee the availability of your preferred pet sitter, whom you and your pets love and adore. And to ensure that the pet care services are adequately budgeted for, as with all other travel planning. One aspect I really like about cruising, from a pet sitter’s perspective, is the advance planning. It gives the travelers a lot of time to strategize, BUDGET, and make necessary arrangements, like reserving pet care or plant watering or house checks so that their routines and lives aren’t disrupted.

Anyway… I myself get “mal de débarquement syndrome” (long-lasting motion sickness that isn’treally curable) when I go on boats (and sometimes planes), leaving me feeling like I am still on the boat for several weeks afterwards, so I have never been drawn to being on a ship for longer than a few hours. I don’t know anything about cruises, and it’s been very interesting reading about the different tiers in the loyalty program. Accruing points to climb the loyalty program ladder, strategizing packages, sounds like a competitive sport!

Maybe the motion sickness feeling is different on a huge cruise liner? Like being on an aircraft carrier? I actually prefer larger planes, too, because somehow a huge plane feels safer in the air than a smaller one for some reason? Because they’re… bigger and heavier??? (Sometimes, it doesn’t make sense yet we believe what we believe.)

I lived in the historic Old Port for many years, and often saw the beautiful brightly-lit cruise ships from my window. I also got inconvenienced in the summer each year when my parking spot on the Quays became a port of entry for cruise ships, and I had to deal with leaving my ID with them just to to get my pidgeon-pooped on Tercel to go run errands. And there was never a squeegee around when you really needed one, and swarms of them when your windshield was spotless.

Montreal seems more like a cruise excursion point rather than a city you can depart from for one of these big international cruise adventures.

Most people who cruise seem to fly to the departure destination, cruise, then fly back home.

However, from a quick internet search, it looks like there are some cruising options departing close to home, right from Montreal beyond a brief dinner cruise up and down the St. Lawrence!

Holland America has a few week-long cruises around New England. There’s even an 11-day round-trip cruise that brings you right back where you started, after seeing New England, Prince Edward Island, and more. No need to hop on a plane to board the cruise, it sails right out of Montreal.

4559611https://www.hollandamerica.com/en/ca/find-a-cruise?embarkPortCode:(YUL)

 

Regent Seven Seas Cruises has a few 11-day cruises from Montreal to Boston and to New York.

https://www.rssc.com/cruises?ep=YUL

 

Seabourn also has a 12-day Canadian Autumn round-trip “Sail of the Year” cruise from Montreal around St. Pierre and right back to Montreal.

https://www.seabourn.com/en/ca/find-a-cruise?embarkPortCode:(YUL)